Currency World Monitor

In addition to supporting currency exchange rate updates via different providers of exchange rate data, Currency Server can automatically check several other types of data, including:

Names, codes, smallest units and other properties of all currencies of the world

Status of European Economic and Monetary Union (EMU) currencies

This additional non-exchange rate data is maintained and provided by Cloanto both to its software customers and as part of its managed services.

Updates to Static Currency Properties

Exchange rates are not the only currency properties which change over time. For example, when a state joins the European Economic and Monetary Union (EMU), its national currency may become a sub-unit of the euro (during a transition phase which may last months or years) before being replaced by the euro. During this timeframe the software must employ a triangulation procedure to convert to and from the national currency. Also, countries themselves may change name (and their currency with them), or split into two or more new countries (with new currencies), or form new unions with other countries, or simply replace an old currency with a new one.

While exchange rate updates occur at least once every weekday, modifications to "static" currency properties (like changes to currency names, or EMU status changes) are considerably less frequent, i.e. they occur about once every few months. Nevertheless, it can be easy to lose oversight of such changes, and longer lists of currencies can quickly get obsolete even if they are not contaminated with old data (e.g. wrong currency names, inclusion of currencies which ceased to be legal tender, etc.) to begin with, as is often the case with lists which can be found on the internet and which are sometimes just a sum of unverified data from different sources.

Once a week or if necessary to process new data, and only during exchange rate data updates, Currency Server also verifies whether non-exchange rate updates are available from Cloanto as part of its Currency World Monitor service. If this is the case, the new data is loaded (but not applied) and an appropriate notification is issued. The message provides information about the nature of the change (e.g. a currency joining the EMU, or ceasing to be legal tender, etc.) and instructions on how to apply the change (e.g. by clicking Reset All in the All Currencies tab and/or Reset EMU in the Active Currencies tab of Currency Server Manager). If this update process fails, the software continues to function normally (updates can still be applied manually, if so desired).

Worldwide Currency Data Updates

Cloanto is a licensee of ISO 4217 currency codes and is immediately notified by the ISO 4217 Maintenance Agency whenever a change occurs. Cloanto also actively monitors other changes such as the status of the EMU, internationalization trends, new currency symbols, rounding procedures, etc. This information is incorporated into the Currency Server software at compile time. Additionally, updates to this static data are made available as part of the Currency World Monitor service provided by Cloanto.

Currency Server specifically supports the following change scenarios for all currencies of the world (not just the currencies listed as active):

These special updates are independent of exchange rate updates (which are provided by different sources), and are provided by Cloanto as part of the Currency World Monitor service.

If the EMU status of a currency has changed since the previous update an appropriate notification is issued by the software, advising to select Reset EMU in the Active Currencies tab, so that the new list of EMU currencies and the corresponding triangulation settings can be applied as appropriate. No changes are applied until Reset EMU is selected. The Reset EMU function includes an option to retain currencies which have ceased to be legal tender, if data for such currencies is available.